Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Cossacks ride again on Russia's southern steppe

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Cossacks ride again on Russia's southern steppe

    Agence France Presse -- English
    June 10, 2007 Sunday


    Cossacks ride again on Russia's southern steppe

    by Victoria Loguinova

    NOVOCHERKASSK, Russia, June 10 2007


    Warrior horsemen who once struck fear into the hearts of nomads and
    tsars alike, Russia's Cossacks are looking to seize power again --
    this time through peaceful means.

    In newly opened schools scattered across their historic homeland in
    Russia's south, young Cossacks are learning spectacular horse-riding
    and sword-fighting techniques in an attempt to revive a culture
    smothered by decades of Bolshevik repression.

    "We did not succeed in seizing power in our traditional homeland when
    we had the chance" after the Soviet collapse, said Colonel Yury
    Dyakov, a top official in the Don Cossack leadership.

    "Today we have another objective, to create an elite cadre to claim
    political power through civilized means."

    Emerging in the southern steppe in the 16th century, the Cossacks
    were former slaves who turned to militarism to survive on the Russian
    frontier.

    Developing into armed groups who served the tsars in colonizing
    Siberia and the Far East, the Cossacks were later crushed as
    counter-revolutionaries by the Bolsheviks after the 1917 Revolution.

    Today there are officially 600,000 Cossacks in Russia -- spread
    across their traditional lands along the Volga, Dnepr and Terek
    rivers and in the Ural mountains -- although their leaders claim
    there are ten times more.

    The Don Cossacks alone boast 150,000 members, and a Cossack leader,
    or ataman, is deputy to the governor of the surrounding Rostov
    region.

    To shore up their ancient culture, the Cossacks have opened six
    schools in the Rostov area since 1991 to hone a new generation of
    warriors. Some 1,500 boys aged 10-17 attend.

    The corridors of the Alexander III school in Novocherkassk are again
    teaming with young Cossacks after an earlier generation of students
    was sent into exile 80 years ago.

    Today the uniformed boarders wake at 6:30 am and file to the canteen
    for a prayer and a modest breakfast.

    "We prepare these young people to serve the state and the fatherland.
    Our objective is to form Russia's future elite," said principal Yury
    Fileyev, a former officer.

    In addition to the ordinary Russian curriculum, the 300 boys study
    Cossack culture, Orthodox religion and the legendary horse-riding and
    weapons skills of their forefathers.

    "When I am older, I will become soldier and defend my Motherland",
    said Pasha Fyodorov, 13-years-old, who like many of his schoolmates
    hopes to continue in a military university.

    Entry to the Cossack schools is tough, with as many as 10 boys
    competing for each place in a battery of physical and personality
    tests.

    When they graduate, many follow their tsarist ancestors in serving
    the government in Moscow.

    Some 1,200 Don Cossacks are involved in law enforcement in Rostov
    region, after a 2005 federal law provided the legal foundation for
    their service in the army and police force, said Dyakov, the top Don
    Cossack official for military liaisons.

    "Our men also serve in the special forces, the Northern and Black Sea
    fleets and in the presidential regiment in Moscow," he said.

    Alongside the Cossack tradition of service to the state is a
    reputation for brutality they earned while fighting ethnic minorities
    on Russia's borders.

    After the Soviet collapse, Cossack volunteers reclaimed their
    military heritage, fighting alongside pro-Russian separatists in
    Moldova's Transdnestr, and Georgia's Abkhazia and Ossetia regions, as
    well as battling the independence movement in the Russian province of
    Chechnya.

    There is no ethnic requirement to enter the Cossack academy, but
    those recruited are expected to be Orthodox believers, said Dyakov,
    noting that there was a group of Cossacks in his region from Armenia,
    an Orthodox ally of Russia.

    Over the years the Cossacks have occasionally challenged the
    leadership in Moscow, with some Cossack regiments rebelling against
    Nicholas II in 1917.

    Today's Don Cossacks are clear where their allegiance lies, though.

    "We work closely with United Russia," the fiercely pro-Kremlin party
    of power, said Igor Kazarezov, deputy to the region's top Ataman, as
    a large photograph of the President Vladimir Putin loomed above him.

    "We support the policies of President Putin."
Working...
X